The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies

Incremental housing, supported by governmental funding, denotes a solution for low-income households where they can gradually customise their dwelling. The Chilean government officials and architects proposed phases of construction which fell short of addressing the households’ capabilities and mot...

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Main Author: Goran Ivo Marinovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2020-11-01
Series:Journal of Architecture and Urbanism
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JAU/article/view/12056
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spelling doaj-d5dbd5a55ba84933945707a809f02e1b2021-07-02T18:54:27ZengVilnius Gediminas Technical UniversityJournal of Architecture and Urbanism2029-79552029-79472020-11-0144210.3846/jau.2020.12056The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studiesGoran Ivo Marinovic0Department of Architecture and Architectural Engineering, American University of the Middle East, Block 6, Building 1, Egaila, Kuwait Incremental housing, supported by governmental funding, denotes a solution for low-income households where they can gradually customise their dwelling. The Chilean government officials and architects proposed phases of construction which fell short of addressing the households’ capabilities and motivation to finalise their units. Hereof, this article looks at two incremental housing projects: Lo Espejo condominium (2007) and Las Higueras (2006) in the Santiago Metropolitan Region, Chile, to inquire capacities of government officials and architects’ comprehensive assistance to families’ housebuilding. The hypothesis holds that the greater responsibility of government officials and architects engaged with incremental housing will enhance motivation of low-income families to customise their house by self-building practice. Arguing for the importance of the self-building the author proposed the guideline for customising houses that comprises four phases: introducing the incremental construction design idea, discussing with families the possibilities for completing houses, connecting households’ construction plans with their financial resources, and presenting the customisation design template. This guideline structure is founded on extensive nine months fieldwork in the Santiago Metropolitan Region, carried out in close collaboration with low-income households from two neighbourhoods, the Ministry of Housing and Urbanism of Chile, the Architectural Office Elemental, and “Gubbins Arquitectos.” https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JAU/article/view/12056incremental housingcustomisation guidelineArchitectural Office ElementalLo EspejoArchitectural Office GubbinsLas Higueras
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Goran Ivo Marinovic
spellingShingle Goran Ivo Marinovic
The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
Journal of Architecture and Urbanism
incremental housing
customisation guideline
Architectural Office Elemental
Lo Espejo
Architectural Office Gubbins
Las Higueras
author_facet Goran Ivo Marinovic
author_sort Goran Ivo Marinovic
title The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
title_short The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
title_full The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
title_fullStr The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
title_full_unstemmed The guideline for customising incremental housing based on two Chilean case studies
title_sort guideline for customising incremental housing based on two chilean case studies
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
series Journal of Architecture and Urbanism
issn 2029-7955
2029-7947
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Incremental housing, supported by governmental funding, denotes a solution for low-income households where they can gradually customise their dwelling. The Chilean government officials and architects proposed phases of construction which fell short of addressing the households’ capabilities and motivation to finalise their units. Hereof, this article looks at two incremental housing projects: Lo Espejo condominium (2007) and Las Higueras (2006) in the Santiago Metropolitan Region, Chile, to inquire capacities of government officials and architects’ comprehensive assistance to families’ housebuilding. The hypothesis holds that the greater responsibility of government officials and architects engaged with incremental housing will enhance motivation of low-income families to customise their house by self-building practice. Arguing for the importance of the self-building the author proposed the guideline for customising houses that comprises four phases: introducing the incremental construction design idea, discussing with families the possibilities for completing houses, connecting households’ construction plans with their financial resources, and presenting the customisation design template. This guideline structure is founded on extensive nine months fieldwork in the Santiago Metropolitan Region, carried out in close collaboration with low-income households from two neighbourhoods, the Ministry of Housing and Urbanism of Chile, the Architectural Office Elemental, and “Gubbins Arquitectos.”
topic incremental housing
customisation guideline
Architectural Office Elemental
Lo Espejo
Architectural Office Gubbins
Las Higueras
url https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JAU/article/view/12056
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